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#21
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My hope is that within a year of
it's release, pilots who fly without them will feel unwelcome to a point they will rather get one... Ramy will you be establishing a scholarship fund for those of us who feel unwelcome and unwealthy? |
#22
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On Aug 31, 11:05*am, Mike Schumann
wrote: On 8/31/2010 12:46 PM, Tuno wrote: Little red handle anyone? There is a little red handle I would LOVE to have. Many years ago the skydiving industry came up with a way to jettison a malfunctioned main canopy and deploy the reserve as a single action by simply adding a static line from the main parachute's riser to the reserve parachute's pin. Thus pulling the "cutaway" handle would also result in a deployed reserve. This system was especially appreciated at low altitudes! Since August 4th I've been wondering how difficult it would be to add a single "red handle" to the glider cockpit, that would be secured to one of the shoulder straps (i.e. at the pilot's torso, easy to find in the worst of conditions). Pulling this handle would simultaneously release the canopy and unbuckle the harness. No fumbling for one set of handles and then another. This handle, as I envision it, would look very much like the cutaway handles in skydiving -- a small pillow attached to teflon cable(s), brightly colored, hard to pull by accident but easy to find and pull on purpose. ted/2NO I suspect that one of the principle risk areas for mid-airs (outside of contests) is in the pattern, near an airport. *There is absolutely no way a conventional chut can save you when you are this low, no matter how fast you can get out of the glider. *A BRS can. -- Mike Schumann- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I concur. The most difficult and time consuming part is the egress from the glider, not the release of the straps. It is unlikely to be able to bailout from a glider below 1000 feet. A BRS could be deployed instantly even from 100 feet. Ramy |
#23
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I suspect that one of the principle risk areas for mid-airs (outside of
contests) is in the pattern, near an airport. * Statistics? What data support this suspection? There is absolutely no way a conventional chut can save you when you are this low, no matter how fast you can get out of the glider. *A BRS can. Not true! Emergency parachutes open in less than 300 feet. Not as good as a BRS of course, but having a "little red handle" can easily be the difference in suriviving a collision at low altitude. |
#24
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On Aug 31, 10:54*am, Ramy wrote:
On Aug 30, 12:35*pm, John Cochrane wrote: Little red handle anyone? JJ If I could put one in my standard category asw 27, I would. In the meantime, why don't we get together and buy flarms, so we don't run in to each other in the first place. They're even on sale for the first 50 orders. I put my order in, so if you get one you won't run in to me next year! John Cochrane BB But in the meantime, to address midairs, the PowerFlarm is the obvious solution, and I just ordered mine. My hope is that within a year of it's release, pilots who fly without them will feel unwelcome to a point they will rather get one... Ramy That will be sad. I hate being unwelcome, but I just used the last of my space (and no small amount of money) to install a (ADS-B capable) Transponder, since my immediate concern is airliner traffic. I see vastly more airliners than gliders when I'm flying. |
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On Aug 31, 11:18*am, Tony wrote:
My hope is that within a year of it's release, pilots who fly without them will feel unwelcome to a point they will rather get one... Ramy will you be establishing a scholarship fund for those of us who feel unwelcome and unwealthy? I realize I may made myself unpopular with this comment ;-) I believe the biggest glider to glider risk is during XC or contests flights, in which the majority of pilots owns glass ships and likely can afford it. Those who obviously can't should get some slack and perhaps use the radio more often for position reports. But those who fly 100K ships should have hard time explaining why they don't use Flarm. My gut feeling is that 90% of pilots who are at risk can efford it, which sould be sufficient to significantly reduce the risk. Ramy |
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On Aug 31, 11:08*am, Andy wrote:
On Aug 30, 4:13*pm, Darryl Ramm wrote: Folks are working on putting up a web site with USA specific content, but in the meantime what else exactly is not clear? So you are saying that the only manufacturer's web site that provides any information on PowerFLARM is not related to the US product, but you still ask me what is not clear? I have downloaded and read extensive documentation on FLARM, including a user manual, installation guide, data port specification and also checked on a FLARM forum. *There is lots of information on the existing FLARM products. No what I was asking is what is not clear to you given I believe all questions raised by anybody about this product on r.a.s. have pretty much been answered. I'm trying to understand what else remains that is causing confusion. If I can I'll either answer it here or make sure it gets answered and ideally put up on the USA webs site. The difference between the USA product and the European web site that caused most confusion is the IGC recorder (a standard feature with up to three diamond certification level in the USA model). I think that has all been pointed out here before and is clear in Richard's web site. Also pointed out here before is ADS-B TIS-B is not shipping in the initial product, as I've tried to point out before that's likely not mentioned in the European web site since it is not relevant to use there. Documentation would be great, I'd love that too, but this is not yet a shipping product. So what else is not clear? Darryl |
#27
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On Aug 31, 1:54*pm, Ramy wrote:
On Aug 31, 11:18*am, Tony wrote: My hope is that within a year of it's release, pilots who fly without them will feel unwelcome to a point they will rather get one... Ramy will you be establishing a scholarship fund for those of us who feel unwelcome and unwealthy? I realize I may made myself unpopular with this comment ;-) I believe the biggest glider to glider risk is during XC or contests flights, in which the majority of pilots owns glass ships and likely can afford it. Those who obviously can't should get some slack and perhaps use the radio more often for position reports. But those who fly 100K ships should have hard time explaining why they don't use Flarm. My gut feeling is that 90% of pilots who are at risk can efford it, which sould be sufficient to significantly reduce the risk. Ramy fair enough. plus us low cost gliders usually have colorful paint jobs and low closing speeds on our side ![]() |
#28
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On 8/31/2010 10:54 AM, Ramy wrote:
On Aug 30, 12:35 pm, John wrote: Little red handle anyone? JJ If I could put one in my standard category asw 27, I would. In the meantime, why don't we get together and buy flarms, so we don't run in to each other in the first place. They're even on sale for the first 50 orders. I put my order in, so if you get one you won't run in to me next year! John Cochrane BB Same here. If there was an option to add a BRS to my 27, I would, even if it will be a substantial cost. I flew hang gliders with a BRS system for many years, and know of a number of hang glider pilots saved by this system. While I doubt it will help with stall/spin accidents, which still seems to be the cause of many accidents, a proper system should be able to save most mid airs, control problems and structural failures. I'd like to see a list of incidents where a BRS could have avoided a fatality. Most of the fatal mid-airs I'm aware of, the pilot was almost surely incapacitated by the collision. The control problems and structural failures seem to have happy endings because the pilot is able to bail out. My impression is the BRS would have a very small effect on the USA fatality rate. The DG web site (referenced earlier) comes to the same conclusion: a lot of expense for very few incidents where it is useful. DG's point is the money should be spent elsewhere in new gliders, and retrofitting did not seem an option for the big majority of glider owners. In fact, if the factories were to simply make Flarm/PowerFlarm standard equipment, that might reduce risk more than offering a BRS as an option. I think getting a lot of USA competition pilots to use a PowerFlarm would reduce fatalities more than the same pilots equipping with BRS, and it can be done in time for next season at far less cost, even if you could buy a retrofit for the same price as a factory installed system. Here's an idea to encourage it: you buy a PowerFlarm at regular price, then you send them a trace from the PowerFlarm logger showing you flew at least one contest day with it, and they send you a rebate of, say, $200. The SSA could do the same thing, offering a rebate on the entry fee for the first contest you fly in with your PowerFlarm. PowerFlarm benefits as the increasing installed base makes it more desirable to use a PowerFlarm, and contest pilots would make good champions for spreading the word. Get PowerFlarm and SSA to do it, and it'd be a tempting offer - heck, it might even increase contest participation to get the rebate, AND because some pilots decide the collision risk is decreased enough to draw them into a contest they would otherwise avoid. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (netto to net to email me) - "Transponders in Sailplanes - Feb/2010" also ADS-B, PCAS, Flarm http://tinyurl.com/yb3xywl - "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation Mar/2004" Much of what you need to know tinyurl.com/yfs7tnz |
#29
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Tuno wrote:
I suspect that one of the principle risk areas for mid-airs (outside of contests) is in the pattern, near an airport. * Statistics? What data support this suspection? "A recent AOPA Air Safety Foundation study of midair collisions revealed that 49 percent occurred in the traffic pattern or on approach to or departure from an airport. Of the other 51 percent, about half occurred during en route climb, cruise, or descent, and the rest resulted from formation flights or other hazardous activities. Eighty percent of the midair collisions that occurred during "normal" flight activities happened within ten miles of an airport, and 78 percent of the midair collisions that occurred around the traffic pattern happened at nontowered airports." From: http://www.aopa.org/asf/epilot_acc/e_chi97fa218a.html There is absolutely no way a conventional chut can save you when you are this low, no matter how fast you can get out of the glider. *A BRS can. Not true! Emergency parachutes open in less than 300 feet. Not as good as a BRS of course, but having a "little red handle" can easily be the difference in suriviving a collision at low altitude. I believe he was considering not just the time for the chute to deploy, but the time to open or eject the canopy, release the seatbelt and shoulder harness, and jump out. If the glider is damaged and tumbling down (e.g. loss of a wing) then egress is probably that much more difficult. And then after all that, pull the chute cord. This assumes the pilot has the presence of mind (and courage) to do something they may not have enough training to do in a prompt and decisive manner. A rocket-propelled whole-aircraft parachute is likely to deploy much faster and requires just one action by the pilot. I believe that the recent RANS S-9 that lost a wing while flying acerobatics in Argentina actually wrapped itself around the parachute lines (which is presumably why it landed under the chute nose-first) but still managed to deliver the pilot to safety even in an unintended attitude. There are exceptions of course where a BRS has not helped, and critics use such anecdotes to "prove" that such devices don't provide perfect safety. It is of course a strawman argument. Like all safety devices a BRS can only improve the odds of surviving an otherwise fatal mishap. |
#30
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Eric Greenwell wrote:
I think getting a lot of USA competition pilots to use a PowerFlarm would reduce fatalities more than the same pilots equipping with BRS, and it can be done in time for next season at far less cost, even if you could buy a retrofit for the same price as a factory installed system. Given the finite resources glider pilots have (only so much time and money) it is reasonable to compute the benefit/cost ratio of BRS versus Flarm and prioritize investment accordingly. But whereas a BRS is useful for a large number of accident classes, (e.g. one's wings fold up (there was just such a case discussed here)) something like Flarm helps only with a single class of accidents. On the other hand, Flarm is less expensive and easier to employ. Beyond having both in one's safety repertoire, absent statistical estimates, it isn't immediately clear to me that one should spend one's finite money on Flarm first rather than a BRS first. The latter is not an available option for a lot of gliders, though. |
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